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Please note:All of our digital downloads are now managed through a free app called FluxPlayer which is available for iOS, Android, Windows and Mac devices. Your digital downloads will be available on your FluxPlayer app after purchase. Digital downloads are available as .mp3, .epub or .mobi files and can be exported from FluxPlayer for use in other applications which support those file types. Learn more

All of our eBooks are now managed through a free app called FluxPlayer which is available for iOS, Android, Windows and Mac devices. Your eBook purchases will be available on your FluxPlayer app after purchase. eBooks are available as .epub or .mobi files and can be exported from FluxPlayer for use in other applications which support those file types. Learn more

In this new, one-volume edition that brings together two of his most popular works, #1 New York Times bestselling author Eric Metaxas explores the question of what makes a great person great? Seven Men and Seven Women tells
the captivating stories of fourteen heroic individuals who changed the
course of history and shaped the world in astonishing ways. George
Washington led his country to independence yet resisted the temptation
to become America's king. William Wilberforce led the fight to end the
slave trade, giving up his chance to be England's prime
minister. Susanna Wesley, the mother of nineteen children, gave the
world its most significant evangelist and its greatest hymn-writer, her
sons John and Charles. Jackie Robison endured the threats and abuse of
racists with unimaginable dignity and strength. Corrie ten Boom risked
her life to hide Dutch Jews from the Nazis in World War II and survived
the horrors of a concentration camp--and forgave her tormentors years
later. And Rosa Parks's God-given sense of justice and unshakable
dignity helped launch the twentieth century’s greatest social movement.
These and other lives profiled in Seven Men and Seven Women reveal how reveal the secret to a life of greatness--by responding to call to live for something greater than oneself.